'For rate cuts to happen, inflation should come down'

Since economic growth has fallen below the trend, how significant a role would RBI play in restoring growth?

One consequence of growth falling below trend is that inflation should also start coming down. We would have expected the process to be already underway, but this adjustment has been delayed, particularly because of the rupee's depreciation in the last quarter.

We expect the process to continue, and we have retained our projection of seven per cent inflation by March-end. And, it would continue to persist beyond March. That really gives us the space to accommodate the slowdown in growth with rate cuts.

But we have also said there are a number of risks, both on the inflation front as well as the macro economic front, particularly the fiscal situation.

So, that is going impose some limit on the amount of space we have to cut rates. We cannot commit to a time frame.

'For rate cuts to happen, inflation should come down'

Today's cut in the cash reserve ratio (CRR) was intended to reduce the structural liquidity deficit. How do you measure that?

It is less of a precise measurement and more of a judgment. The measurement comes from the magnitude of the deficit above the one per cent (of net demand and time liabilities) benchmark.

That gives us an immediate reason for examining it. Then we look at persistence. There have been situations in which it was above that benchmark, like December, and the last three months.

In December, we responded with open market operations (OMOs), as our monetary stance was still anti-inflationary. So, we could not visualise a CRR cut that time, and we did OMOs.

This time, we did OMOs up to the point where we felt we could go to a CRR cut. Because we have been giving guidance about the interest rate cycle having peaked, the CRR cut was not in conflict with the policy stance.

The policy cycle has peaked, so we could use the CRR as a liquidity measure. The CRR is a policy tool, but in this context, we have used the liquidity dimension in a way that it does not compromise our monetary policy stance.

'For rate cuts to happen, inflation should come down'

Since you have addressed the problem of structural liquidity using CRR as a tool, would you be still open to OMOs?

Absolutely. I think the driver of OMOs is the judgment that there are persistent liquidity pressures in the system. The fact that we have reduced the CRR does not, in any way, rule out further OMOs. It would depend on how the situation evolves.

Do you have any expectation on the comfort zone of liquidity deficit to affect a rate cut?

No, I don't think the liquidity deficit will have any bearing on the rate cut. The rate cut would be driven by growth-inflation dynamics.

So, if we see inflation trending down quite sharply, along with some fiscal consolidation that leads to enduring changes to the growth-inflation dynamics, we could visualise a rate cut. The immediate trigger has to be inflation moving down.